“Almost eight months.”
“Eight… months?” Esteban repeated, in shock.
Tears sprang from Sofia’s eyes. For the first time in years, they weren’t from physical pain.
—“I was afraid… afraid that you would find out. Afraid of your gaze, your expectations… and of myself. I don’t know who I am anymore. These five years… I lived like a ghost. And when my body began to heal… I didn’t know what to do. You gave me everything… but I could no longer love you the same way.”
Esteban didn’t speak. His heart wasn’t broken just by betrayal. It was broken because five years of love, sacrifice, and faith… had become nothing. He always believed that love could heal any wound. But he had forgotten that some wounds are not in the body… but in the soul.
The other man tried to leave, but Esteban held up a hand.
—“You don’t have to leave. I only want one thing: the truth.”
The physical therapist lowered his head:
“I never wanted this to happen… But she needed someone to listen. You were her husband, her caregiver… but no longer the one who understood her. She was alone… even within your love.”
Esteban said nothing more. He left the house, still holding the wallet he had returned for—now a symbol of the moment when everything changed. The walk back to work felt twice as long.
That day, it rained.
Later, he moved in with relatives in Veracruz. No complaints. No lawsuits. He quickly signed the divorce and left the house to Sofía.
“Consider this my gratitude for five years of marriage,” he wrote in shaky but firm handwriting.
He went back to teaching, this time at a small rural school. Life was slower, sadder… but also lighter.
One day, someone asked him:
“Do you regret having sacrificed so much?”
Esteban shook his head and gave a tired smile:
“No. Because when you truly love, you don’t count the price. But from now on… I’ll learn to love myself first, before loving someone else.”
This story has no villains or perfect saints. Esteban wasn’t guilty of loving too much. Sofia wasn’t guilty of wanting her life back.
The real tragedy… was that they both believed love was enough to preserve everything—even what had already died in silence.